headyversion

find the best versions of grateful dead songs

please login or register.

Carrion_Crow

Stealth Head

+49667


Submissions

5
Playin' In The Band
Sept. 26, 1973
War Memorial

Eclectic melodicism and mood shifts make this beauty at times sound like outer space, at times like a bossa sunrise on the beach. A '73 gem.
5
Brown Eyed Women
Sept. 26, 1973
War Memorial

Sweet and tight. Soulful vocals and - if I'm not wrong - Phil singing harmony (???). A great show from the fall '73 tour.
12
Playin' In The Band
Sept. 26, 1972
Stanley Theatre

Sweet version with long Jer and Bobby double solo. Hits all the '73 highs: tight, long jam, with lots of Jerry's fast-mellow and space bugs.
4
Let It Grow
Sept. 24, 1973
Civic Arena

Bobby's neck vein-poppin vocals and Phil's full-throttle power make this a great one. Sept.'73 horns are low in the mix for a cool live/studio effect.
7
Mississippi Halfstep Uptown Toodeloo
Sept. 24, 1973
Civic Arena

Steady rockin' version with beautiful outro.

Comments

Alligator
Feb. 7, 1969
Stanley Theater

The guiro + vibraslap driven drums interlude that never leaves the Alligator theme makes this. There's even the cool rarity vocal break "ta ta ta ta takita takita takita takita ta" at the end of the drums section before the brilliant jam section with the '69 China Cat theme. I'm going to go out on a limb here and say at one point in the "primal Alligator jam" segment they are definitely jamming over the "Mountain Jam" chords. Any reason it couldn't be? I hear it.
The Other One
Feb. 7, 1969
Stanley Theater

My god, the outro....
Brown Eyed Women
Dec. 27, 1977
Winterland Arena

Welcome Shug! So you like ye some hard rock Dead? Me too. Check out two of my favorites: The Other One from October 22, 1967 (sound's like the whole goddamned Viet Nam war in one go) and Easy Wind from September, 20 1970, which just kills me every time. I like 'em mellow, too, but we tend to forget just how freaking dangerous the Dead were from the beginning. Enjoy! Edit: Or just go to setlists.net and look for anything with a "feedback" in it - I guarantee that there was some hard driving that went before it. Or for that matter, damn, the whole of 1968 is like one giant supernova. Rock on.
Playin' In The Band
Sept. 18, 1974
Parc des Expositions

Great catch Grendel. Billy and Phil are definitely laying the voodoo down. I've always thought that the influence of electric Miles Davis has an been under-appreciated factor on (especially) the '74 long jams that don't acid melt. In any case Billy could have subbed any night of the week for Jack DeJohnette - and the Sly influence on Miles was totally acknowledged by Miles himself. The sly Sly drop comes back in around 13:00 pretty clearly. There's another Miles who's influence goes under-appreciated too: Buddy Miles (Jimi's drummer from the Band of Gypsies period), who's great funk from '68 forward is clearly informing our boys during this period. Man, they're vast. I just keep coming back to the well, and it just keeps giving up that sweet sweet water. Thanks for the shout-out.
Mind Left Body Jam
June 28, 1974
Boston Garden

Almost a Dark Star: I just listened again and it's clear at just after 10:00 how they shift gears and leave the MLB path into the Star. Didn't quite coalesce, but instead went into a beautiful up-tempo modal exposition. It's so beautiful they could do anything they wanted with it.